I received a nice invitation from a friend to check out Amma who is
coming to Alexandria Virginia this weekend.  It was a great litmus
test for how I feel about spiritual people to decide if I would go see
her or not.

My first instinct was "sure, why not".  I have only heard good things
about her from people who traveled with her and know her personally,
and I have a pretty positive regard for her work from a humanistic
point of view, people can really use some lov'n from what I can see. 
I thought the whole scene would be a gas. 

As I gave it more thought I realized that I do have an aversion to
entering a room where the context is set up that the person I am
seeing is spiritually elevated above me.  The only time I encounter
this at all is the few times when I have gone to the Buddhist temple
with Thai friends.  I am not so caught up in my POV that I can't enjoy
kneeling in front of these guys and letting them bless me.  The main
gift brought for monks at the temple is rolls of toilet paper!  They
don't seem very elevated to me.  But I give them a pass on their
"spiritual" pretensions that their saying something to me and waving
their hand effects me in any positive manor.  It seems like a child's
game that I can go along with. "marko...polo...marko...polo"  Plus I
enjoy the whole surreal nature of the scene there.  (OK, I am there
for the hot food and hot chicks!)

So I intended to check out Amma and enjoy another culture.  Then the
reality sunk in that I would be competing for her attention with
people who REALLY wanted to see her.  They would be lining up for
darshon tokens hours ahead of time (according to one of the
organizers).  So quickly I became the typical spiritual dilettante
"Inconvenient to meet a saint?  Oh no I am much too busy for that."  I
am all caught up in many shows this weekend and know that I wont have
the kind of dedication I used to have when waiting hours and hours for
MMY.   But the question remained about who I would go see and under
what conditions and why?

Pope- Too much trouble, I hate crowds and I don't think much of him. 
I would never kiss his ring but might enjoy sneaking in a furtive ass
grab in an embrace!

MMY-  Small group with possibility for questions, yes. I would never
go through the hours needed even if I was allowed within 5 miles of
him.  Would I give him a flower?  Out of nostalgia absolutely.  I know
we really have nothing to say to each other that would matter now. 
Although I view him as a bit off  his rocker he is fascinating and
even more so now that I don't view him as I once did.

Amma- I would welcome an easier meeting.  I still might try to check
out the scene and skip the darshon.  Part of me felt a bit
disingenuous thinking of her hug as more valuable or special than my
GF's or other people I love in my life.  I don't feel a need for more
love from a stranger.  But I also see her work in a positive light
because the world could use more good vibes and acceptance.  I thought
the videos of her hugging people looked beautiful, the people were
obviously moved by it.  Perhaps the fact that it is a stranger makes
it more abstractly powerful? As a performer I have to say that I get
hugged regularly by strangers and it is all good vibes but not
transcendent for me.  I am still obviously conflicted about going!

Ravi Shankar  Since we are about the same age I would have trouble
with any version of deference that would be required.  I still think
of him as the ambitious charismatic guy I used to talk with on the
Vedic Science course in India.  He was just formulating his plans to
go on his own and was trying it out on me a bit.  I haven't found
anything I have read from him very insightful, but I guess it is about
the practice and I am not going to put my guitar down that long. I
would probably not enter a situation that was so rigged on the power
set up.  I am his equal and those are the terms I would require.

I can't think of anybody else.  When I meet my music heroes like Rory
Block or John Hammond I feel a thrill.  But even though their
experience and years in the business puts them on another level a bit,
they are cool and treat me with respect.  I don't feel as though they
are being condescending and I don't feel that I am admiring them as
whole people, just their musicality.

Perhaps Geezer and Turq have more insight on meeting famous people.  I
would probably feel over the top meeting Paul or Ringo.  That might be
close to the old MMY darshon buzz.  I have heard that even very famous
people act like school girls around them.  My GF hung out with Ringo
and said he was the most natural unpretentious rock star she had ever
met. (Grateful Dead, not so much)

I wouldn't care to meet George Bush or any (other) actor. (Since
Angelina has gone all Mia Farrow, I have to drop her from my list)  I
can't think of any famous person spiritual or not that I would want to
wait in a long line to meet. 

I would wait in line as long as it took to meet Son House, Robert
Johnson or Charley Patton if they rose from the grave.  I would top my
MMY hours waiting around record for those guys.

Very interesting question, anyone else want to play?




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